Theory of Consumer Behaviour – Study Guide- class 12 Economics

Theory of Consumer Behaviour – Study Guide

Theory of Consumer Behaviour — Study Guide

1. Preliminary Notations and Assumptions

  • Consumer consumes many goods; analysis often simplifies to two goods (x and y) for graphical clarity.
  • Basic assumptions: completeness (consumer can rank bundles), transitivity (consistent rankings), non-satiation (more is preferred to less), and continuity (no jumps in preferences).
  • Notations: x and y are quantities of two goods; Px and Py are their prices; Y denotes income (budget).

2. Utility

2.1 Cardinal Utility Analysis

  • Cardinal approach assumes utility (satisfaction) can be measured in cardinal numbers (utils).
  • Two important measures:
  • Total Utility (TU): total satisfaction from consuming n units of a good x.
  • Marginal Utility (MU): additional satisfaction from consuming one extra unit of x: MU = ΔTU / Δx
  • Law of Diminishing MU: as consumption of a good increases, MU eventually falls (other things equal).
  • Consumer equilibrium (cardinal): consume where MU per rupee across goods equalizes (for two goods x and y):
  • MUx/Px = MUy/Py
Example: If MUx=20 utils, Px=4, MUy=15, Py=3 → 20/4 = 5 and 15/3 = 5 → equilibrium.

2.2 Ordinal Utility Analysis

  • Ordinal approach ranks bundles (more preferred, less preferred) without measuring utility numbers.
  • Uses indifference curves (ICs) to represent combinations of goods delivering same satisfaction.
  • Indifference maps: higher ICs represent higher utility levels.

3. Indifference Curves and Their Properties

  • Indifference curve slopes downward from left to right — to keep utility constant, increase in one good requires decrease in the other.
  • ICs are convex to the origin reflecting diminishing Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS).
  • Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) = rate at which consumer is willing to give up y for additional x while remaining equally satisfied: MRSxy = Δy / Δx |utility constant
  • Diminishing MRS: as x increases, MRS (willingness to give up y for x) falls — consumer gives up less y for additional x.
  • Higher IC ⇢ greater utility. Two ICs never intersect. ICs are continuous and downward sloping.
Graphical intuition: starting at a point on IC, moving right (more x) requires moving down (less y) to stay on same IC. The slope at any point = MRS.

4. Representation of Law of Diminishing MRS

  • At high y / low x, consumer willing to give up many units of y for small increments of x (high MRS).
  • As x increases and y falls, consumer values additional x less relative to y (MRS falls).
  • This produces convex ICs — mathematical implication of diminishing marginal utility across goods.

5. The Consumer’s Budget

5.1 Budget Set and Budget Line

  • Budget constraint: all bundles the consumer can afford given prices and income.
  • Budget line equation: Pxx + Pyy = Y
  • Intercepts: x-intercept = Y / Px (all income on x); y-intercept = Y / Py (all income on y).
  • Slope of budget line = − Px / Py (relative price or opportunity cost).

5.2 Changes in the Budget Set

  • Income change (Y↑): parallel outward shift of budget line (same slope).
  • Price change (Px↓): pivot outward on x-axis (budget line rotates), changing slope.
  • Price ratio change affects relative affordability and thus optimal choice.

6. Optimal Choice of the Consumer

  • Consumer chooses bundle on budget line that lies on highest attainable indifference curve.
  • Tangency condition (interior solution): slope of IC = slope of budget line:
  • MRSxy = Px / Py
  • Corner solutions occur when tangency not feasible (e.g., perfect substitutes or binding non-negativity).
  • At optimum with interior solution: MRS equals relative price; marginal utility per rupee equalized across goods (ordinal analogue of cardinal rule).
Example: If MRS = 2 (willing to give 2 units of y for 1 of x) and Px/Py = 2, tangency holds → optimality.

7. Demand

7.1 Demand Curve and the Law of Demand

  • Demand: relationship between price of a good and quantity demanded, ceteris paribus.
  • Law of demand: price ↑ → quantity demanded ↓ (negative slope) due to substitution and income effects.

7.2 Deriving a Demand Curve from Indifference Curves and Budget Constraint

  • For various prices of x (keeping income and Py fixed), find consumer optimum (tangency or corner). Record corresponding x quantities → plot price-quantity pairs to obtain individual demand curve for x.
  • Graphically: as Px falls, budget line becomes flatter → higher optimum x (movement along demand curve).

7.3 Normal and Inferior Goods

  • Normal good: demand ↑ as income ↑ (positive income elasticity).
  • Inferior good: demand ↓ as income ↑ (negative income elasticity) — consumer substitutes better goods as income rises.
  • Income changes shift demand curve (right for normal goods, left for inferior goods).

7.4 Substitutes and Complements

  • Substitutes: goods where an increase in price of one raises demand for the other (positive cross-price elasticity).
  • Complements: goods consumed together; price rise of one reduces demand for the other (negative cross-price elasticity).

7.5 Shifts in the Demand Curve

  • Demand curve shifts due to changes in income, tastes, prices of related goods, expectations, population, or taxes/subsidies.
  • Movement along the curve occurs only when own price changes (other factors constant).

8. Market Demand

  • Market demand is horizontal summation of individual demands at each price.
  • Market demand curve shifts when aggregate factors change (income distribution, population, preferences, policy).

9. Elasticity of Demand

9.1 Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

  • Price elasticity measures responsiveness of quantity demanded to price change:
  • PED = (% change in quantity demanded) / (% change in price)
  • Point elasticity (differential): ε = (dQ/dP) × (P/Q)
  • Interpreting ε: |ε| > 1 elastic; |ε| < 1 inelastic; |ε| = 1 unitary.

9.2 Income and Cross-Price Elasticities

  • Income elasticity: responsiveness of demand to income changes: η = (%ΔQ)/(%ΔY)
  • Cross-price elasticity: responsiveness of demand for good A to price of B: εAB = (%ΔQA)/(%ΔPB)
  • Signs indicate normal/inferior (income) and substitutes/complements (cross-price).

9.3 Elasticity along a Linear Demand Curve

  • Along a straight-line demand curve, elasticity varies: elastic at high price/low quantity end, unitary at midpoint, inelastic at low price/high quantity end.
  • Slope (ΔQ/ΔP) is constant but elasticity (ε) depends on P and Q values.

9.4 Factors Determining Price Elasticity

  • Availability of close substitutes (more substitutes → more elastic).
  • Proportion of income spent on the good (larger share → more elastic).
  • Necessity vs luxury (necessities → inelastic; luxuries → elastic).
  • Time horizon (long-run elasticity greater than short-run).
  • Definition of market (narrowly defined goods → more elastic).

9.5 Elasticity and Expenditure

  • Total expenditure (TE) = P × Q.
  • If demand is elastic (|ε| > 1): price decrease increases TE; price increase reduces TE.
  • If demand is inelastic (|ε| < 1): price increase raises TE; price decrease reduces TE.

10. Movements vs Shifts — Clarification

  • Movement along demand curve: change in quantity demanded due to own-price change (ceteris paribus).
  • Shift of demand curve: change in demand due to non-price factors (income, tastes, related goods, expectations, taxes).

11. Practical Examples & Short Applications

  • Numerical MU example: TU sequence: 0, 10, 18, 24, 28 → MU: 10, 8, 6, 4 (diminishing MU).
  • Deriving demand from ICs: at Px=10, optimum x=2; at Px=8, optimum x=3 → demand points (10,2) and (8,3).
  • Elasticity and revenue: if P falls from 10 to 9 and Q rises from 5 to 7 → %ΔQ = 40%, %ΔP = −10% → PED = −4 (elastic) → TE increases.

12. Quick Summary Table

ConceptKey Idea / Formula
Total Utility (TU)Total satisfaction from consuming given quantity
Marginal Utility (MU)MU = ΔTU / Δx
Indifference Curve (IC)All bundles giving same utility; convex and downward sloping
Budget LinePxx + Pyy = Y; slope = −Px/Py
Consumer OptimumMRS = Px/Py (tangency)
Demand ElasticityPED = (dQ/dP) × (P/Q)

Use these points with diagrams: TU–MU table/graph, indifference curves & budget line tangency, and demand curve graphs. Practise numerical problems (MU per rupee equalization, deriving demand from changing prices, elasticity calculations) for mastery.

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